Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Best Books on TDD, Agile, and SCRUM by Woody Zuill

My friend, Woody Zuill, is a developer and manager that I respect an awful lot. Recently he was asked to recommend great books on agile software development. Since Woody is always reading, he seemed like a great guy to ask. His response was thoughtful and interesting, so I thought I'd post it below:

"The books I've found useful all have holes in them. You have to get a fair amount of bad to get a small amount of good.

- For me, the Lean books by the Poppendiecks were probably the most good with the least bad.

- Kent Beck's XP book - both editions. I think you need both to get it all. These books have been very useful to me. A lot more real stuff and real thinking than most of the "How To Agile" books.

- Kent Beck's TDD book

- The second edition of Alistair Cockburn's book - Agile Software Development: The Cooperative Game. I think the first edition missed the boat in a lot of things. I think he must have learned a lot by the time the second edition came out. I don't know how experienced he actually is, but I like the nature of his book. Note: His book on How to Survive an OOP project was one of the worst books I have seen.

- Of course, Michael Feather's Legacy Code book is great. I recommend that for all developers.

- And Bob Martin's Clean Code and Agile Software Development books are must reads. The Bob Martin Agile book is overall probably the most useful book I've read (on software development) - but it is a hard read in some ways, and very difficult to sort through.

- I found Diana Larsen and Esther Derby's Agile Retrospectives book very useful to adjust my thinking about making teams work well.

I used to like Mike Cohn's books on estimating and so on - but only barely. Not so much anymore. Same with Ken Schwaber's Scrum books, in some ways I wish they were never written.

I'ver read about 20 or 30 books on the topic, and flipped through a lot of others. Most are misleading at best. Knowing what I know about things in general, I suspect a lot of this garbage is written by people who don't really know what they are talking about and aren't able to admit it to themselves. I want to believe that - otherwise the authors are being purposely misleading or deceptive and I am not ready to accept that.

There is one book that I really loved, and felt the guy was actually right on - but I searched all over the Internet tonight looking for it and couldn't find it. When I get home I'll look around and see if I can find it. [ I found it: "Sustainable Software Development: An Agile Perspective" by Kevin Tate. I must have "loaned" it to someone because I couldn't find it anywhere at home. I remember it as being very good and humble - but I read it about 5 years ago and haven't seen it since so a re-read is in order, and I reserve the right to change my mind about its usefulness. ]

Well... there have been a lot of good in a lot of those (and other) books. And for me, the main use was to help me think through things. There is a lot of garbage to sift through, though."

Great stuff, huh? Below are links to all the books he references in the email:

1 comment:

Bio

Ike Ellis is a SQL, Business Intelligence, and Data Consultant. He is the founder of the San Diego Tech Immersion Group (SDTIG) and the SQL Pass Book Readers. He's spoken at conferences around the world, including TechEd. He's been a Microsoft MVP since 2011.